Ethical issues in graduate education

Abstract

Concern about the employment prospects of Ph.D.’s in the sciences and engineering has prompted overdue interest in the ethical aspects of graduate education. It is not possible to isolate an ethical inquiry that focuses solely on job-related issues. The ethical problems in graduate education are each related to employment, but none is related to employment only. We can illuminate potential ethical problems by considering conflicts of interest at each point from the decision to offer a graduate program through the treatment of its alumni. Such consideration prompts reassessment of program content, relations with students, and the objectives of graduate programs.

Keywords

ethics graduate education employment students conflict

This paper is a revised and expanded version of a presentation given at the American Association for the Advancement of Science meeting in Seattle, WA, February, 1997, during a program organized by the National Science Foundation (“Ethics, Employment, and Graduate Education in Science and Engineering,” Rachelle Hollander, Organizer).

Samuel Gorovitz is Professor of Philosophy and of Public Administration at Syracuse University.

Leatherman, C. (September 6, 1996) Relations Between Graduate Students and Their Mentors, Though Rarely Violent, Are Often Fraught With Tension, The Chronicle of Higher Education, p. A15.Google Scholar